Award Banner
Award Banner

India rail crash probe focuses on track management system

India rail crash probe focuses on track management system
Heavy machinery removes damaged coaches from the railway tracks at the site of a train collision following the accident in Balasore district in the eastern state of Odisha, India on June 4.
PHOTO: Reuters

NEW DELHI - Investigators are probing an electronic track management system that they suspect malfunctioned and caused India's deadliest train crash in more than two decades, railways officials said on Sunday (June 4).

At least 275 people were killed on Friday when a passenger train hit a stationary freight train, went off the tracks and hit another passenger train passing in the opposite direction in the eastern state of Odisha.

In their first detailed briefing on the crash, Indian Railways officials said that failure of the track management system was the main focus of investigations.

The computer-controlled track management system, called the "interlocking system", directs a train to an empty track at the point where two tracks meet, Sandeep Mathur, principal executive director for signalling, told reporters.

It also coordinates and controls the signal to an oncoming train, indicating whether the train has to move straight or switch to a new track, he said.

"It is supposed to be tamper-proof, error-proof. It is called a fail-safe system, even if it fails the signal will turn red and the train will be stopped," said Jaya Varma Sinha, a member of the Railway Board that runs the giant state monopoly.

"However, as it is being suspected, there was some kind of a problem in the system."

Explaining the sequence of events that led to the crash at Bahanaga station in Balasore district, Sinha said the Coromandel Express heading to Chennai from Kolkata moved out of the main track, entered a loop track - a side track used to park trains - at a speed of 128 kph and crashed into a freight train carrying iron ore that was parked on the loop track.

The crash caused the engine and the first four or five coaches of the Coromandel Express to jump the tracks, topple and hit the last two coaches of the Yeshwantpur-Howrah train heading in the opposite direction on the second main track, she said.

The interlocking system should not have allowed the Coromandel Express to take the loop track, Sinha said.

She said she had spoken to the injured driver of that train and he had told her that he was within the speed limit and had not jumped a signal and all of this would be verified by systems that record track and train details, she said.

She did not name the driver.

There are many "possibilities of what can go wrong," Sinha said.

This could include someone digging in the area through which cables of the electronic system pass and damaging them in the process, or a short-circuit, or a machine failing.

"99.9 per cent there is no possibility of the machine failing but there is a 0.1 per cent chance of failure," she said.

"That possibility is always there in all kinds of systems."

She did not name the supplier or manufacturer, or the age of the system. But said it is in use across almost the entire Indian railway network.

ALSO READ: At least 207 dead, 900 injured in massive train crash in Odisha, India

Source: Reuters

homepage

trending

trending
    Unable to bear children, she proposed annulment of marriage so he could start a family. He chose love.
    'My greatest dream come true': Taylor Swift buys back rights to her first six albums
    US halts new student visa appointments - what now for students from Singapore?
    'I made a fool of myself': Malaysian woman trying to buy G-Dragon concert tickets accidentally buys ones for Kenny G
    Cones with reflective discs: More safety measures during peak hour at Woodlands Checkpoint after accident
    1.2 tonnes of illegally imported fresh and processed produce seized at Tuas Checkpoint
    In a first, NParks trials use of dead bird effigies to prevent crows from congregating
    Uncovering the secrets behind Chagee’s best-selling jasmine green milk tea
    13 men suspected of being members of unlawful societies arrested in island-wide operation
    Zhang Zhenhuan's daughter, 3, tries out acting, gets visit to Shanghai Disneyland as reward
    Revealing 4th cancer diagnosis, Law Kar Ying says he's at peace with death
    Slim, sleek, but slightly too short-lived: Samsung Galaxy S25 Edge review

Singapore

Singapore
    • Non-life-threatening calls to 995 will be referred to triage helpline in nation-wide trial from June 1
    • Israel may be in breach of international law by restricting aid to Gaza: PM Wong
    • 'Your cue to show some care': LTA rolls out new Helping Hand card for commuters who need more assistance
    • 'We couldn't believe our eyes': Tourist charged $200 cleaning fee for eating durian in Singapore hotel room
    • Fire breaks out at Ubi coffee shop, 1 taken to hospital
    • Daily roundup: Fewer private university grads find full-time jobs in 2024, compared to 2023 — and other top stories today
    • Jalan Kayu SMC, Punggol GRC form new town councils
    • French President Macron and PM Wong sample local fare at Lau Pa Sat; sign deals on defence, AI at summit
    • 'We will sue him until he goes bankrupt': Victim's mother plans to sue ex-actor Ian Fang
    • 'We couldn't just stand by and do nothing': Samaritans recount helping after Braddell Road accident

Entertainment

Entertainment
    • Netflix responds to allegations of When Life Gives You Tangerines' extras being subjected to starvation and mistreatment
    • Gossip mill: Henry Lau welcomed by fans at Changi Airport, Cha Eun-woo and Rowoon to enlist in July
    • Zheng Geping gets surprise birthday celebration on drama set
    • Grab exclusive Dylan Wang merchandise with Chagee's upcoming Longjing Milk Tea series
    • Jenna Ortega felt unhappy after Wednesday fame
    • Ozzy Osbourne suffering 'badly' from ADHD
    • Jackie Chan blames 'too much money' for lukewarm reception of Rush Hour 3
    • 2nd woman tells jury Sean 'Diddy' Combs raped her
    • Jackie Chan wanted to 'give up' his acting dreams before seeing Karate Kid and Rocky
    • Ayumi Hamasaki, CL, Show Lo: Singapore concert calendar for 2025

Lifestyle

Lifestyle
    • Jurassic World, inflatable playgrounds and more: Family-friendly events and activities this June holiday
    • Kopitiam offering 60-cent hot kopi-o and teh-o from June to mark SG60
    • Porridge, pancakes and more: Popeyes enters Singapore's fast-food breakfast game
    • I visit GastroBeats again, here's whether it's still worth the hype
    • I had a mini cook-off with Chef Bob as he launches his latest creations - here's how it went
    • Hawkers say sales dropped after Chee Soon Juan wrongly shared their business closed
    • Uniqlo's local food tees draw buzz for looking 'eerily similar' to Singapore brand Musoka Club
    • Singapore ranked 2nd-most expensive city for an overseas education; only Asian city in top 20
    • Made in Singapore: First locally-made Kia, the EV5, officially launched
    • I visit Swensen's Unlimited's new concept, and now I'm contemplating holding my wedding here

Digicult

Digicult
    • World's best Dota 2 teams to compete for $1m prize pool in Singapore in November
    • A $500 wake-up call: How the Samsung Galaxy Ring made me realise my stress
    • Monster Hunter Wilds producer explains how game has remained unique and fresh over 20 years
    • Initiative by IMDA, AI Verify Foundation tests AI accuracy, trustworthiness in real-world scenarios
    • Under siege? Helldivers 2's latest city to be invaded by aliens could be spoof of Singapore
    • Honor 400 Series launches in Singapore with first free in-device AI image-to-video tool
    • Home Team humanoid robots to be deployed by mid-2027, $100m to be invested: Josephine Teo
    • Ado concert review: Singer without a face ignites fans while in cage with only silhouette visible
    • EU and US authorities take down malware network
    • Google Pixel 9a: The best AI-centric phone under $800 in 2025?

Money

Money
    • Wall Street equity indexes close higher after US-China tariff truce
    • Giant deal: Malaysian company to acquire Cold Storage and Giant supermarket chains in Singapore
    • Why These Buyers Chose Older Leasehold Condos—And Have No Regrets
    • Can you still own multiple properties in Singapore? Here's what you need to know in 2025
    • Selling your home for the first time? Here's a step-by-step timeline to follow in Singapore
    • Why some central 2-bedroom homeowners in Singapore are stuck
    • How the interest rate cycle works - and what it means for your home loan
    • Tampines, Sengkang and more towns set new 2-room all-time-high records - is this part of a broader trend?
    • More people rented in April 2025 despite higher prices, here's what drove it
    • Looking to buy Singapore property in 2025? Here's what's different (and what could catch you off guard)

Latest

Latest
  • 7 migrant women and children died metres from shore in Canary Islands
  • Wildfire smoke exposure may shorten lung cancer survival
  • Trump gets key wins at Supreme Court on immigration, despite some misgivings
  • Trump administration orders enhanced vetting of all Harvard University-linked visa applicants
  • US Supreme Court lets Trump revoke humanitarian legal status for migrants
  • US CDC continues to recommend Covid-19 vaccines for children, contradicts Kennedy
  • Harvard's US-funded defence projects totaled $232 million in recent years, study shows
  • Conditions in Gaza are catastrophic despite renewed aid, UN says
  • Rock collapse at Indonesia quarry kills at least 10 people

In Case You Missed It

In Case You Missed It
  • Woman crawls out of storm drain in shocking Manila street scene
  • DBS staff, police stop 2 victims from losing $820k to government official impersonation scams
  • 'Be humble in victory': PM Wong sends traditional 'Rules of Prudence' letter to PAP MPs after GE
  • Pedestrian, 84, dies in accident involving minibus in Choa Chu Kang
  • NDP 2025 marks SG60 with expanded celebrations from Padang to Marina Bay
  • Obesity rates are rising in Singapore, but is overeating the only cause?
  • Trump administration blocks Harvard from enrolling foreign students, threatens broader crackdown 
  • 'We apologise for the operational lapse': NUS responds to backlash over disposal of Yale-NUS books
  • No joke: Bangkok condo resident releases snakes in corridor to protest neighbour's noisy dog
This website is best viewed using the latest versions of web browsers.